Sprigs o' Heather Girls' Pipe Band

You can view a booklet produced by the band to celelbrate its 25th anniversary in 1981.

It includes a list of committee members, pipe majors, drum majors, instructors and details about performances, awards and travel.Click on the image to see the complete booklet.Thanks to Terry [McNamee] McDougall for supplying it.

This picture of the Sprigs was taken in the late 60s and was given to piping instructor Jack Kerwin when he left Moose Jaw. Jack was involved in the old Prairie Pipe Band Association, and now lives in Nova Scotia. He was kind enough to e-mail this photo for use on the site.The young women who signed the photo were:Linda Lee, Sandy Meikle, Linda Cameron, Jane Binda, Tracey Poole, Mary-Gaye Bastido,

Sprigs O' Heather Girls Pipe Band - 1961This picture of the Sprigs was taken in 1961. Photo: Dick Gibson.See large size.

Preparing for a parade. 1971 or '72

Sprigs O' Heather Girls Pipe Band - 1970s

This picture of the Sprigs was taken sometime in the 1970s in Crescent Park, Moose Jaw.See large size.Photo: Dick Gibson.

The Sprigs O' Heather Girls Pipe BandThis photo was taken in the late 1970s during the Moose Jaw Kinsmen Band Festival

The Sprigs O' Heather Girls Pipe BandThis photo was taken in the early 1980s during the Moose Jaw Kinsmen Band Festival. The Sprigs are no longer in existence, but were one of Saskatchewan's best-known pipe bands for a number of years. The band travelled to Ontario and the Maritimes to compete, and to Scotland. The band wore the Dress MacDonald tartan.

Two Moose Jaw Pipe Bands

This photo was taken in 1983 and features L-R: Jim McWilliams and Lachlan McWilliams of the White Hackle Pipe Band, and Wendy and Sharon Lee of the Sprigs o' Heather Girls' Pipe Bans

Outdoor Mural in Moose JawFollowing the disbandment of the Sprigs in the 1980s, the organization changed to become "The Heather Highlanders" for a few years, and some of the "old" Sprigs came back to play, along with others. This band never really got off the ground, but the executive contributed a sum of money toward purchasing an outdoor mural in Moose Jaw to commemorate the pipe band.